AP English teacher Mary Wood was once punished for having her class read Ta-Nehisi Coatesβ acclaimed book βBetween The World and Me.β Last year, two students in Woodβs class at Chapin High School in South Carolina complained to the school board about her lesson.
They stated that βBetween the World and Meβ made them ashamed to be white (the book discusses racism in America). Furthermore, it indicated that Wood was in violation of a state proviso that bans teachers from causing students βguilt, anguish or β¦ psychological distressβ due to their race.
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Days after the complaint, Lexington-Richland School District Five officials made Wood stop teaching the book. Additionally, parents and residents demanded that she be fired. However, that didnβt deter her from having her students learn Coatesβ work.
The schoolβs new principalβa Black manβgave Wood permission to teach the book once more. Per The Washington Post, she revised her curriculum so it wouldnβt violate the state proviso. Parents reviewed her lesson, gave them the chance to have their child opt out and included a conservative perspective contradicting Coatesβ work.
βIt teaches kids a different perspective, [it] teaches kids how to write well,β Wood said in an interview explaining her decision. βItβs the right thing to do.β However, there has still been palpable opposition to Woodβs decision. Conservative accounts on Facebook and TikTok have stated that Chapin High teachersβincluding Woodβare pushing left-wing ideologies on young students.
However, Wood has been allowed to continue teaching the book. A board meeting last month allowed students to explain the impact of reading work from diverse viewpointsβone of them being Woodβs son Summit who was enrolled in the course.
Wood is just one of many teachers across the country who are fighting censorship. Hopefully, her story will inspire other educators with privilege to do the same.
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